yes, otherwise they would be extinct. No, but babies sometimes have ocean sponges.
yes sea sponges.
The Porifera are the sea sponges. Some simple examples are the kitchen or bath sponges or other sponges that one can see diving -- from barrel to branch sponges.
Neither, sponges have their own phylum separate from both of those, called Porifera ('pore carriers').
Arthropods and sponges are two major divisions in taxonomy called Phyla (singular, phylum). Phylum Arthropoda ("joint appendages"), or the arthropods, includes such creatures as insects, spiders, millipedes, crustaceans, etc. Phylum Porifera ("pore-bearing") are the sponges.
If the subject at all, many babies would be the complete subject and babies the simple subject.
yes sea sponges.
They release spores into the air which is caught by a female and then have babies
ocean
sponges are use in washing plates,glass of water.some sponges are in/on salted water on the ocean floor.
Sponges displace the ocean's water, and the water that they do "suck up" becomes part of their volume, and thus has no effect on the depth of the oceans. When you remove sponges, they will no longer displace water in the ocean, so the ocean will actually be shallower.
The sea sponges lives on the bottom of the ocean in salt waters.
sponges are naturally grown in the ocean floor and then harvested and dried to be used.
in the ocean
Animals that live in the ocean.
Spongebob Squarepants
Sponges in the ocean can live up to 200 years old. They are primary produces and give off more oxygen than they take in.
They don't. They are attached to the bottom of the ocean.